These were the show purchases, with the exception of the bag bottom centre with the brown funnel, that was floor sweepings at the end! Visible highlight is probably the two Gem hedges?
About Me
- Hugh Walter
- No Fixed Abode, Home Counties, United Kingdom
- I’m a 60-year-old Aspergic gardening CAD-Monkey. Sardonic, cynical and with the political leanings of a social reformer, I’m also a toy and model figure collector, particularly interested in the history of plastics and plastic toys. Other interests are history, current affairs, modern art, and architecture, gardening and natural history. I love plain chocolate, fireworks and trees, but I don’t hug them, I do hug kittens. I hate ignorance, when it can be avoided, so I hate the 'educational' establishment and pity the millions they’ve failed with teaching-to-test and rote 'learning' and I hate the short-sighted stupidity of the entire ruling/industrial elite, with their planet destroying fascism and added “buy-one-get-one-free”. Likewise, I also have no time for fools and little time for the false crap we're all supposed to pretend we haven't noticed, or the games we're supposed to play. I will 'bite the hand that feeds', to remind it why it feeds.
Wednesday, December 7, 2016
P is for Postponed Plunder Post - Plastic Warrior 2014 May Part - I Show Purchases
So, an old show-plunder post (actually one
of four), the photographs for which have been in Picasa so long, half the
interesting stuff has already been Blogged! But as an exercise in 'how it comes
in' it will hopefully be interesting, I know how I like poring over mixed shots
on evilBay, seeing what I can ID or take a fancy to . . . this is the Plastic
Warrior show plunder, May 2014!
These were the show purchases, with the exception of the bag bottom centre with the brown funnel, that was floor sweepings at the end! Visible highlight is probably the two Gem hedges?
The contents all sorted and spread out.
It's 'find your favourite' really . . . quite a bit of space bought - mostly -
from Barry Blood who was thinning his collection out, I was particularly
pleased to get the Gem skier with both poles and both skis, three hard-plastic
from hollow-cast moulds are off the beaten track, footballer flats, a Speedwell
swoppet cowboy and a heap of Khaki infantry . . .
. . . from Adrian Little (and others) as I was
still working on the then 'new' page at the time, not that I've given up, but
it's the odd addition from time-to-time now, and the fact that I still have to
add some text! Note: bottom right; a Cherilea 'dancing loon'!
These were the show purchases, with the exception of the bag bottom centre with the brown funnel, that was floor sweepings at the end! Visible highlight is probably the two Gem hedges?
Tuesday, December 6, 2016
S is for Sets
Just a quick one to finish-off the Ukrainian Collectable posts, we've looked at the individual vehicles and figure types, these are the various sets bagged, boxed or set-up with some of the accessories they contain.
With thanks again to Mark
Sergeyev for sending the pictures and information of this unusual range from the so far still 'independent' Ukraine.
I've added an image of the Ukrainian boarder guard emblem I filched from the Wibbly Wobbly Way!
Bags and Boxes
Larger bags
Different header-cards
Security sangers and boarder-signage
More
Strike Three!
With older lead/aluminium (?) figure
Smaller sets
Recap
I've added an image of the Ukrainian boarder guard emblem I filched from the Wibbly Wobbly Way!
Labels:
AFV; APC/MCV,
AFV; Jeep,
AFV's,
Cardboard,
Flats,
Make; Ukraine,
Modern,
Paper,
S,
Ukraine
Sunday, December 4, 2016
F is for Firemen
A quick round-up of a few small-scale chaps, but probably not small enough for war-gamers to get excited about I'm afraid. I haven't got them in front of me to measure (this post has been in edit since February!) but they are all in that 35/40mm bracket of figures designed for 1:48, 50 or 64th scale die-cast toy vehicles.
I think these are mostly different generations of Corgi, the figure went in the hydraulic-arm basket of a Simon Snorkel fire appliance with the older ones to the left of the line-up, the yellow-helmeted guy though may be from a piracy, or a redesign of the basket?
The last one (similar but different to the Jimson sculpt) has details (base and base mark) in common with production from both Blue Box and Rado Industries, but could be neither and is probably from a Hong Kong or Japanese (Yonezawa tin-plate snorkel?) copy of the Corgi model, but who by? Both the last figure and yellow-helmet are polyethylene, the rest PVC of different densities.
Dinky went with a hard polystyrene, and their basket guy gets a metal clip which is often missing and the breathing-gear on the second chap from the left really dates this set! These guys were copied in a larger scale by The Lucky Toys for several different fire trucks (AEC, Bedford, US type and Land Rover F/C) and also imported in Clifford Toys branding.
I think these are mostly different generations of Corgi, the figure went in the hydraulic-arm basket of a Simon Snorkel fire appliance with the older ones to the left of the line-up, the yellow-helmeted guy though may be from a piracy, or a redesign of the basket?
The last one (similar but different to the Jimson sculpt) has details (base and base mark) in common with production from both Blue Box and Rado Industries, but could be neither and is probably from a Hong Kong or Japanese (Yonezawa tin-plate snorkel?) copy of the Corgi model, but who by? Both the last figure and yellow-helmet are polyethylene, the rest PVC of different densities.
Dinky went with a hard polystyrene, and their basket guy gets a metal clip which is often missing and the breathing-gear on the second chap from the left really dates this set! These guys were copied in a larger scale by The Lucky Toys for several different fire trucks (AEC, Bedford, US type and Land Rover F/C) and also imported in Clifford Toys branding.
Spot-On had a hose guy, also in hard styrene, he normally comes with a heavy plinth base, a slighter oblong one, or - as in my case - neither! A hose could be plugged-on to the back-end of the sculpt, which helped the baseless ones stand-up and two were issued with a meddling kid (Tommy Spot) in each boxed set (Land Rover and fire trailer)
Labels:
35mm,
40mm,
Corgi,
Die-cast Access.,
Dinky,
F,
Firefighters,
Hong Kong,
Make; British,
Plymr - Ethylene,
Plymr - Styrene,
Spot-On,
Unknown
Saturday, December 3, 2016
D is for Die-cast Ducks
A quick comparison between the two recent D.U.K.W. amphibious 6x6 cargo-trucks variously issued by De Agostini and Altaya (no tilt), Eaglemoss and some Russian outfit (tilt and rope-fenders), they are both a mix of materials on a die-cast body/shell.
I would have scored the Russo-Chinese (Ocean Metal Factory) one the better of the two (marginally) if it hadn't come sans one wheel! The underside detailing is better on the Russian import, but marred by the base-mounting screw-holes, and the provision of a glass-effect windscreen is a plus, but the DeAg,/Altaya version has the nicer nose (with separate tools/snorkel) and cab-interior, so you takes your money (the Russian one wins! £2 in The Works!) and makes you choice!
I would have scored the Russo-Chinese (Ocean Metal Factory) one the better of the two (marginally) if it hadn't come sans one wheel! The underside detailing is better on the Russian import, but marred by the base-mounting screw-holes, and the provision of a glass-effect windscreen is a plus, but the DeAg,/Altaya version has the nicer nose (with separate tools/snorkel) and cab-interior, so you takes your money (the Russian one wins! £2 in The Works!) and makes you choice!
Labels:
1:76 - 1:72,
25mm,
AFV; Amphib.,
AFV's,
Altaya,
D,
DeAgostini,
Eaglemoss,
Magazines,
Make; China,
Metal - Die Cast,
Ocean Metal Factory,
Part Works,
Readymade,
The Works,
WWII
Friday, December 2, 2016
T is for Two...Hollow cast Westerners
Time for another of those 'don't-know-anything-about-them-but-photographed-them-months-ago-anyway' posts, with a bit of hollow-cast for the fans of such things, and as usual with these it's a thanks to Adrian Little at Mercator Trading for the shots, which show . . .
. . . some of the most copied poses ever, and they're not Airfix! I don't think they're Timpo sculpts either, probably Britaims or Crescent maybe? Anyway, they were copied in hard and soft plastic by various people both sides of the Channel - if not the Pond?
The Lustre set are finished in what was known as 'spirit paint'' and are slighter mouldings, so later copies than the painted ones by Betal Parade. The single-colour ones may well have been sold singly as penny or tuppence toys in addition to the boxed set.
Labels:
Betal Parade,
Boxed,
Lustre,
Make; British,
Metal - Hollow Cast,
T,
Wild West
Thursday, December 1, 2016
S is for Still Working on It!
Re. composition page: I got the free Internet a day early, so am transferring all the off-line edits! Then I still have to re-write the composite section and find all the missing links!
We've seen these before but I think, but I've added a couple? 'Composite' rather than 'composition' they are carved wood with brass sheet or wire detailing and a smoothing coat of gesso (a chalk or gypsum paint) or a thick plaster 'slip'; hand-painted, probably Indian or - certainly - somewhere in Asia.
Labels:
Animals,
Birds,
Composition,
Composition; Plaster,
Fantasy,
Make; Indian,
S,
Wood
Sunday, November 27, 2016
C is for Composition Page News
I haven't been snoozing; I just sort of
lost my mojo! However, sitting around opening folders and closing them again
with a mental 'nah!' I rediscovered
my mojo for the Blogger-wreaked Composition Page (hands-up if you're now
thinking of seaweed!), so I have been busy with that*.
Finding missing images which were mostly on
the big 'unknown' dongle, re-writing the lost sections (still got to do
'composites') and so on, I found a few duplicate images which I'll use here to
announce the publishing of the page in a week or two, and these, below, which
have come-in over the two years since I lost heart in that page, and which I
can't be arsed to slot into the article.
This is the most interesting; it seems to
be a previously un-recorded addition to the Zang
for Timpo 40mm civil range; a man
standing in a dinner suit, perhaps being given a ticket by the New York cop
we've seen previously (a second one of
those has turned-up too, with an equally thin base to the first one, so he may
not be Timpo at all?)
Same size but five to ten years older is
this Panzer tank-commander/AFV-crewman with the distinctive pre-war floppy
beret. I assume he's Elastolin from
the base, my Lineol 40mm's have
marked, oblong bases, painted grey, while this is green (obviously) and too
small to carry a mark; Quality isn't up to Lineol
either!
Maybe supplied to a third-party for a
tin-plate toy, several variants of those clockwork Gama and Gama-like Pz.Kfw.I's
had a little flappy hatch-cover? Equally: it may be - from the tiny base - that
he's to stand in a staff-car or truck?
In the 'Other Materials section of the
composition page I cover soap and sugar-craft, but as it's a short section with
two better figures illustrated, this can go here! I don't know who Baby Brumas was**, cartoon? Kid's comic
character? Regents Park zoo
attraction? Logo/mascot for Cullingfords?
Anyway - a nice little bear figural soap, probably of similar age to the Timpo
figure.
* - And reading; I've been catching up with some reading, Ender's Game was a good read, the current book on Military Disasters (sorry: 'hinges') by someone I can't pronounce is heavier going, and a bit shit, seemingly lifted from other sources and cut together with over-excitable hyperbole and a bit of plain old inaccuracy!?
** - Upon posting - I do now! Awwwww . . . sweet!
Labels:
40mm,
Animals,
Books,
Boxed,
C,
Civilian,
Composition,
Composition; Soap,
Elastolin,
German,
Make; British,
Make; German,
Teddy Bears,
Timpo,
WWII,
Zang
Wednesday, November 23, 2016
B is for Buck Bucks Ageing . . .
. . . by 400 years and finds a world
pretty-much unchanged, but with very stupid robots and the odd spaceship! I
didn't think much of the TV series back in the 1980's and the toys which sat on
its coat-tails weren't much better, this one being TSR's effort: Buck Rogers: Battle for the 25th Century.
Also a bit of a box-ticker as it's got a
big section in/on Boardgamegeek and has been Blogged elsewhere/elsewhen. It's a
funny one for another reason; I have the whole set which when I was preparing a
few board-game articles for One Inch
Warrior (link below) years ago I realised was
missing one of the character figures.
At a show in Birmingham (NEC) some chap had
a set's-worth of figures in a tub for about 50p per figure, this was about 6/8
years ago, so I picked the gold character figures out, he too only had five,
but I thought "Well, chances are!" only to find that actually Murphy
dictates that sod's law trumps chances-are, and the missing figure
was the same (it's one of the two women but as they are all in storage I can't
report which one).
At probably the last Car Boot Sale I
attended, also about 6 years ago, I got four in a bag of game pieces, still
with the same missing figure, as one of the two absentees! Some time ago, maybe
a couple of Plastic Warrior shows
ago I picked up another five with one female missing but still didn't know
which one, and with the other growing pile in storage, still couldn't blog the
whole set!
Then last weekend Gareth brought me a small
bag of stuff among which were the full set: 'Good things come to those who
wait'! So I can now Blog them, but all the player characters, killer satellites
and micro-rocket ships are still in storage, so you win's some you lose some .
. . anyway I had fun taking the pictures!
So these are the six character figures (I
think the names are with the right piece) each in charge of an army of a
different colour in a game with a Risk-type
look (the mechanism however, is much more convoluted), the first thing that become clear is that there are two sizes and
what looks to be three sculptors across the set (including the two 'army'
figures) and I believe there is a naughty reason for this . . .
. .
. although I can't pin them down (yet), several of them look familiar, and I
suspect they are all lifted from metal sets of the era (the game was issued in 1988), there were
tons of companies around '78/82-onwards advertising regularly in the modelling press
with this sort of stuff, and I think that's where they come from?
The smaller-scale hooded-girl on the left (Adarla?)
for instance, looks very familiar as a role-play 'sneak thief', the equally
small guy (Killer Kane?) on the other end of the line-up also seems familiar,
while the guy next to him with the 'aytees' jumpsuit and notebook (Doc Huer, supposedly
an older man?) looks likely to be based on the Guildford, Surrey dwelling alien
- Ford Prefect - from the BBC's TV
rendition of The Hitchhiker's Guide to
the Galaxy? Again I seem to remember him from a Hitchhiker's set (not the Denizen Miniatures set) announced in Military Modelling's On Parade or G2?
The 'army builder' figures, I've only got
the one big one here, but it's all you need for a post like this!
Again a massive difference in size and
sculpting style, with the smaller one looking like he's been taken from a lead/whitemetal,
post-apocalypse, Sci-Fi, war-games, street-gang, while the larger one looks
like he's from a 28mm Role Play range, and possibly based on some cartoon
figures from Heavy Metal, the
graphic novel magazine, I also remember a set of space warriors called 'Doomguards' who looked a bit like this
figure, is he a Drilliet or Mobius character?
If you followed the BBG link though, you'll know he's meant to be bigger...genetics!
The only contemporary plastics were the Matchbox Adventure 2000 figures (ironically copied by HG Games in their equally poor Buck Rogers set), one of whom has the
same hussar-jacket buttoning (which has a special name I know, but: no Internet
at home, library in storage!) as one of the Buck
Rogers figures, they (the Matchbox)
were also a bit bigger yet.
Although, giving it a moment's thought - as
well as possible connections with the TV series and maybe lead figures, along
with the Matchbox design similarities
it must be said; both the main TV characters also bear more than a passing
resemblance to the equivalent figures in the Airfix 54mm set, also contemporary with both the TSR and Matchbox issues, and containing other figures which paid homage more
to both Dr. Who characters and
members of Blakes 7's motley crew.
Playing on the plains of Planet
Bhoringcova! Daleks with mind-slaves (why not - Cybermen seem to have them
these days!) maneuver into attack formation, a mixed group of older (but much
better) Daleks and Cybermen surround a last stand of the characters, and . . .
"Can you tell me where I am . . .
and when, please?"
Sometimes in Picasa you highlight say, two Merit
shots, you want to collage, then, accidentally - or absentmindedly - hit the
collage tool for the set of photo's in the folder above - the result was so abstract
that I thought it suitable to subject you to!
I realised afterwards that the gold-backed character
line-up has the look of Nigella Fáràgê (rymes with c**t) meeting The Trumpton (war with Iran now odds-on!)
in that wholly overblown and tasteless vestibule last week!
A man who decorates his corporate HQ like a
set on Dr. Who, circa 1983 has just
been elected President of Oohessay, but then, I guess he has kept his
hair-style from 1983! Mullets and war, with sexism and rusty pick-up trucks,
there's your end-of-year predictions for what to look forward to in 2017, from
the oracle at Waltii, get that tinned food in now.
If any of the metal guys recognise the
sculpts let the rest of us know, if not I'll do a little digging myself in a
couple of weeks (I happen to know I have four days of unlimited free Internet
coming-up - whoohoo!) and see what I can come up with!
Labels:
B,
Board games,
Buck Rogers,
Daleks,
Dr. Who,
Fantasy,
Matchbox,
Plymr - Ethylene,
Sci-Fi,
Space 'Opera',
Spacemen,
TSR
Tuesday, November 22, 2016
G is for Guns
I was sure I'd Blogged this, but there is
no sign of past images on the dongles, and I couldn't find any post to link to
when I posted yesterday's Bell set
last week, so this post is by way of 'being overdue'!
Not a false memory in the normal sense of
falsely imagining a set of figures from childhood, or a wrong scale due to the
growth of the hands in adulthood, but rather more simply (or simplemindedly!)
convincing myself I'd photographed, edited, collaged and published something I
hadn't . . . I wonder what else I think I've publish but have yet to show?
No matter; it's here now . . .
. . . looking much like yesterday's gun -
at first glance - but in Merit cloth,
not Bell, this is a common design
from the 1950's 'dime-store' oeuvre, I'm assuming it's a Pyro design originally as the other vehicles in the Bell set were, but this gun wasn't
issued in any of the large Pyro boxed
sets, and other makers carried a similar beast.
Indeed - one of the frustrations of having
the bulk of the collection in storage is that I have several versions of this
gun, in various sizes and both hard and soft plastic; which would go well here
- ne'er mind, it's an excuse to return to the subject another day!
The various components of the gun, it's
quite a fictional piece, loosely based on (or vaguely resembling) the weapon
that was Gunner Milligan's 3-inch howitzer part in the Second World War!
Missing from my example are both the small rubber dental-band used to provide
fire-power and a runner with 12 of the small shells.
This one has wooden wheels, requiring a
complete redesign of the underside to take a copper-plated steel axle. There
are other differences between this version and the earlier Bell model, not least the 'hammer', which is smaller, flat topped
and less well defined as a moulding, suggesting that the Bell may well have been a mould-swap, while the later Merit was a copy, re-cut from left-over
stock?
An old evilBay auction shot of one with
hollow-backed, soft-plastic (polyethylene) wheels, a year or so younger than
mine (?) but with the same box, along with the one we saw yesterday, with the 'Pyro' tractor wheels. The Merit plastic wheels were also deeper
than the HK copy.
Looking at the shells in what appears to be
an old cap-carton rather than a Merit
'thing' reminded me I might have them somewhere?
A selection of Randal stuff (as I had the box out) in styrene, ethylene and
propylene with metal and wooden parts (both the bomb and the pistol have
spring-actions). Between their known brands; Bell, SEL and Merit, they produced a vast range of
toys, playthings, hobby accessories, educational/early-learning products and
scientific instruments from their HQ in Potter's Bar, over about a half-a-century - there's always a decent
enough selection on 'the 'Bay'.
I then went into the attic to look for the
shells, and while I found some and they are in twelve's and do look 'right' and might be by Bell/Merit, they aren't the right
colour, however the smaller, silver ones reminded me that not everything is in
storage!
So a three-shot post becomes a nine-image
round-up! First-up; we’ve looked at this set on the penny-based khaki-infantry
page, where it comes with Britains
piracies, it's about the same size as the Merit/Bell
gun, and the wheels are copies of the fuzzy Merit
one I snapped from evilBay.
While this smaller one is quite common
having been included in/with several sets around the end of the 1960's, these
two versions sharing the same backing card and mini-ship, but one having a few Airfix-copy figures while the other
comes with two guns.
Both of these sets were dated to 1969 by James
Opie; we have seen them here before as well I think, or on the Airfix Blog, but 'in context' gives us
the excuse necessary to look at them again!
The Woolbro
set - clearly considering itself above 'the rest' - has posh, gold-plastic
guns, the poor-old generic set gets the commoner silver polystyrene weapons.
Labels:
Artillery,
Bell,
Boxed,
British,
Carded,
Dime Store,
G,
J and L Randall,
Make; British,
Merit,
Plymr - Styrene,
Pyro,
Woolbro
Monday, November 21, 2016
D is for Dimestore
Well, this is a pretty thing, is it not?
Went to the Autumn/Christmas show at Sandown Park last weekend, I didn't take
any 'show' photographs - too busy, but I did shoot a couple of nice bits on
Adrian's stall, and also bought a few bits of interest for December's posts.
I presume they are copies of the US maker Pyro's 'dimestore' vehicles and figures;
as the later Merit jeep was a copy, and this set seems to be a Bell offering, the earlier brand of Randall, parent of Merit.
One or two of the vehicles were marked BELL, the big red gun (shells/bullets
missing? Certainly missing for the smaller piece) had 'A BELL TOY' while another just had a partial 'MADE IN ENGLAND' and with
no label remaining on the box, it's hard to call whether they are copies or
licensed/mould-swap types.
Certainly, as Merit, the gun would reappear [link]**,
but with a metal axle and wooden wheels rather than the heat-welded stub-axles
used here. The figures have been issued by several companies over the years and
we will return to them one day, but as seen here always flat and - in this case
- only the single figures present; the stretcher team and mounted officer of
the original set not included/copied.
The tractor is in the US-specific
'row-crop' configuration with the front wheels brought together to make an
almost tricycle undercarriage arrangement, as far as I know such a layout was
never used in the UK. So not the most useful artillery-tractor either, with its
agricultural-specific wheel set-up, but, hey, they were toys!
A couple of the marks and the
machine-gunner; clearly designed as a gift-set with the red boxing, wouldn't
you have loved to find this under the tree at Christmas? Did you get one? If
you did you're older than me!
** The red 'link's - should you ever encouter another - are supposed to be note to me reminding me to add the link when I'm uploading the post at the library (then I remove the red text!), in this instance I can't find the bloody post?!! I'm sure I have posted both the gun and the box, seperately, but I might be getting confused with the Jeep/gun combination, so I will dig it (the gun) out this weekend and post it for Tuesday . . . if I have it here? Doh!
Labels:
AFV; Amrd. Car,
AFV; APC/MCV,
AFV's,
Artillery,
Bell,
Boxed,
D,
Dime Store,
Flats,
J and L Randall,
Make; British,
Merit,
Plymr - Styrene,
Pyro,
Tractors,
WWII
Sunday, November 20, 2016
R is for Ranty Guys (including the author!)
There is an anonymous Blogger out there;
you may from time to time have encountered his Blog, although I doubt you've
bookmarked it, as it's really only a vile litany of negativity! It's a bit of a
rambling post today, but how do you answer someone who may be talking about
some other 'Brit'?
"Get
link for ranty rude guy" said the note on the dongle's 'to do' list
when I moseyed-up the Public Library on Monday, I may as well have written 'find
Piss-stain's Blog', anyway I got the link:
This was what one of his recent posts said
(his posts only ever 'say' stuff, no pretty pictures of toys!)
Politics
Websites related to toys need not discuss
politics. Especially those related to
manufactures And the sent forums or
blogs. Really sucks when these comments are by the site owner. And one is a
Brit!!! So please stop
and another . . .
"I don't think a toy soldier site of any type is the place bake statements or discuss the shootings in Orlandob IMHO"
Now, it has been my opinion (I have lots of
opinions; I'm quite an opinionated chap!) for some time that anonymous
commentators on the Internet are like piss-stains - known only to the person
wearing those pants.
I don't know if he meant me, or some other Brit?
But the "And one is a Brit!!!"
with a capital 'a' and three exclamation marks is interesting, does he mean
that Brit's shouldn't be Blogging/Manufacturing or 'sent forum'ing (?, another habit of piss-stains is to suffer basic
illiteracy), or that he can't believe one would dare? Or: does he mean Brits
shouldn't 'do' politics, specifically?
Or maybe - having correctly surmised that
Brit's are miles beyond his Neanderthal rut on the evolutionary scale* - he
can't believe one would stoop to his level, as many of his posts are political;
only toy and toy-collecting 'political' admittedly; but political never the
less? Hypocrisy: another of the dubious talents clung-to by piss-stains.
I have slowly come to realise, that while I
had high hopes for the democratising power and educational possibilities of the
Internet, it will never live up to those hopes until anonymity is disallowed,
and all commentating has to be undertaken with the strength of the writers
conviction, knowing he/she is 'known' to his/her audience - with all the risks
that entails; especially in countries where arms are easy to come-by.
While the Internet will fail to educate
until the ignorant can admit their ignorance and take steps to improve their
knowledge level - with the aid of the Internet! Not that easy, as first you
have to learn to avoid those bits of the Internet peopled by piss-stains, or at
least recognise when you are in one of those bits, Wikipedia is the prime example.
It's something they are doing in Africa
(often led by poor women organising co-ops) and Asia (more likely NGO involvement), while
- in the 'West' - our dimwits wallow in self-pity and the blame-game, sat in
front of a financed, wide-screen TV, watching porn in their stained pants,
preparing their 'blue-shorts' for the coming victorious march back to the
1930's!
However, I digress, getting back to our man
in the yellow trousers; I wrote an erudite and mildly amusing comment on that
post (well, I thought it WAS, OK?), needless to say he didn't publish it,
Soviet style censorship being a preferred method of those from the land of
'Free Speech' in the Penn-State Toy Soldier Mafia, and he is PSTSM; he reserves
his worst bouts of excess verbal-diarrhea for some of its fellow members!
Although when I say he's PSTSM, he's obviously
been kicked-out of the main gang by one of the ringleaders, so now he's like
the runty snitch who follows the gang around going "I'll rob the store, let me rob the store, I'll show you, I'll let him
have it, the filthy [insert nationalist epithet here] fucker, I'll kick him good and do the cash register, let me, please; I'll
do his old-lady too, the bitch, heh, heh-heh" only to be rejected, yet
again and follow-up with "You
fuckers, I don't want to be in your gang anyway, you're all horrid, I'll have you!
You'll see!"
All a bit over dramatised but . . . you get
the picture, just look at his blog - I failed to find a positive post, it's all
negativity, so much hate.
I don't like curry (except chicken korma),
so I don't keep trying to eat it (except chicken korma), so, for Piss-stain and
any other visitors who don't like my style: Don't visit my Blog - fuckwits!
You know; If you need to be fed
fear-friendly, asinine-pap through a tube in your arse while you keep your head
snuggly buried in the sand, you've accidently come to the wrong place, don't
come here again - is my advise!
Exercise your personal choice through your
personal freedom to not physically search-for and then click-on the links that
brought you here! Make a mental note: "No
to smallscaleworld.com", it's not hard.
The reason I had to remember to get the
link to Piss-stain's Blog is because I don't link to it, unlike the hundreds of
other sites I do promote, nor have I bookmarked it. As he himself points out; I
don't need to know him.
Politics - real politics, not 'toy soldier'
politics - govern every moment of every day of our lives, where we sleep even.
Politics govern how we get our toys, what they are made of or what they cost.
Politics dictates their availability and whether or not we can send them to
each other and how much that might set us back. Politics sets the levels by
which we can or cannot afford to Blog, or find the time to Blog, or the space
to Blog, somebody without political conviction is nobody.
We live in a world which is actually dying,
and our response is to start voting for the bully-boys we fought against in the
1940's, that is worthy of the odd mention!
I say all Bloggers should be at least a
little political some of the time, it makes you a more rounded person and just
like the Facebook where you learn to bite your tongue when someone you love
says or re-posts something a little off-colour, so your Blog 'regulars' know
when to ignore a post they may not agree with, only to comment on a neutral
post a few days later to let you know they're still there!
The point is, all of us think differently
about all sorts of things outside the field of our Blog, and in difficult times,
such as these, I would argue (as - I'm sure - would piss-stain seek to justify
his wittering) we all have a moral duty TO Blog a bit of politics, my posts are
getting increasingly political, and I expect will continue to do so, the
parallels are there - in the toys.
The next time we visit ships (which we have
regularly and they are popular posts) I WILL have something to say about
anti-ship missiles and the RN, or cutting-open our four newest vessels to put
the corrected engines in and what that'll cost us!
We collect historical and military subjects
that represent the forces which have shaped and (in the case of Ukrainian card
figures!) are shaping our world, to ignore that, or - god forbid - sanitise it,
is to fail to exercise our voice in a world where some are speaking too loudly
already: Nigella Fáràgê (rhymes with c**t) springs to mind . . . there I go again: being
'political'!
Some, like Piss-stain, will post anonymous
hate, others will post extremely erudite, educated points subtly hidden in the
text; I suspect I'm somewhere in-between, think - rampaging bull in a
cuddly-toy shop - a mess; but not much damage!
One of humanities least useful traits (and
the only one unique to them I think) is hypocrisy, and having mentioned it
above must admit I used to have 'handles' or nicknames on the internet, and -
to be fair to both myself and everyone else - that's how it was in the early
days, but now I don't. I first used my real name on HaT as I wanted to be
equated to the work I'd done for One Inch Warrior magazine, not something I
could do with an anonymous ID.
Then I realised I needed to be me here as
well, so Maverick Collecting went for
a Burton's (only a select group of friends use Maverick anyway!) and never came
back. Then the Facebook caught me (not for long, that's knee-deep in
piss-stains!), and really, it's liberating to be yourself, there's an honesty
there - even if you annoy people!
So I at least, have to give some thought to
what I say and how I say it, it's easy to mouth-off if you're a piss-stain, but
you won't affect anyone's opinion, because they can't relate your wittering to
you, you're just another piss-stain.
"Websites
related to toys need not discuss politics" - but if they do they'll
probably be the richer for it.
===============================================================
If you've read this far hoping for new
toys- I've added another tractor to the jig-toy page,
with no politics!
*That is of course a tongue-in-cheek
comment - we all: are who we are -
and Brits, Yanks or Rus, some are good, some are bad, some are evil and some
are anonymous piss-stains.
Saturday, November 19, 2016
D is for Dozor
The last set-specific post on Ukrainian Collectable Paper Soldiers
looks at one of the new tools in the defence armoury of the UBG, the Dozor fast-attack 'battle-taxi' AFV.
Obviously a lightly armoured (against light-weapons/fragments)
vehicle on a 4x4 chassis, similar in appearance to several vehicles in service
at the moment, both the French and the Germans have designed similar equipment
for their quick-reaction forces (QRF's).
From the other side: Mark (the designer of
the range) says that all the uniforms depicted in the sets were recently
replaced with new ones, so these are now 'historical' figures, even though they
featured in the 2014 emergency - an emergency which is still ongoing!
The Dozor
has a remote firing system for the cupola/roof heavy machine-gun which is a
useful feature for laying-down covering-fire in the event that a quick
skedaddle is required!
A couple more shots, and thanks again to Mark
Sergeyev at Ukrainian Collectables for the pictures.
Labels:
AFV; APC/MCV,
AFV; Jeep,
AFV's,
Cardboard,
D,
Flats,
Make; Ukraine,
Modern,
Paper,
Ukraine
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)





































